Collective Liberation through Sex Education
Come Curious. Leave Connected.
Join us at Drip Collective (172 N. Racine) for a joy-forward night rooted in reproductive justice, pleasure activism, and the beautiful belief that educated and embodied communities are foundational to collective liberation.
We’ll have a panel discussion that’ll tell it like it is. We’re talking bodies, consent, power, and the systems that shape it all. Expect honest conversation and the kind of clarity that inspires compassionate action and care.
For folks who want to stick around, we’ll have some time to craft, zine, and vision board. It’ll be a chance to imagine and begin building a more liberated world.
Of course, we’ll have a raffle, delicious food, and drinks—both alcoholic and non-alcoholic.
Tickets are required and can be purchased below. Can’t make it? Support our vision by making a donation.
Sliding-Scale Tickets
As with all of our events, we’re offering sliding-scale ticket options. When registering, please select the payment level that works for you. For guidance, we’ve provided the below reference based on work by Alexis J. Cunningfolk and Britt Hawthorne.
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I frequently stress about meeting basic needs* and don’t always achieve them
My debt sometimes keeps me from meeting my basic needs*
I am unemployed or underemployed
I have limited or inconsistent access to savings
I have very limited expendable income**
I rarely buy new items
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I may stress about meeting my basic needs* but still regularly achieve them
My debt doesn’t keep me from meeting my basic needs*
I am employed
I might have access to financial savings
I have some expendable income**
I am able to buy some new items and I thrift others
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I am comfortably able to meet all of my basic* needs
My debt doesn’t keep me from meeting my basic needs*
I am employed or do not need to work to meet my needs
I have access to financial savings
I have an expendable** income
I can always buy new items
*Basic Needs include food, housing, health care, and transportation.
**Expendable Income might mean you are able to buy coffee or tea at a shop, go to the movies or a concert, buy new clothes, books, and similar items each month, etc.
Sliding scale information adapted from Alexis J. Cunningfolk (wortsandcunning.com) and Britt Hawthorne (embracingequity.org).
About the co-hosts:
Chicago United Solidarity Project creates holistic systems of care through mutual aid, political education, and collective organizing. In 2025 they distributed 40,000 lbs of food (feeding 300 families/month), 36,000 diapers, and 20,000 lbs of pet food (feeding 400 pets/month).
Sexpectations is a collective of educators committed to creating a safer, healthier, consent-culture world. They are rooted in abolition, powered by truth, and building a pleasure-centered world one real conversation at a time.
Women Unite! is a women-led and operated nonprofit that provides free and sliding-scale capacity-building services to grassroots organizations. Each year, Women Unite! raises millions of dollars for queer, women, and BIPOC led organizations through its grant writing, fundraising, design, and collaborative event planning services.